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Entries tagged as ‘Gary Eyer’

Upcoming Boxing Event: Abell -vs- Butler on December 4

November 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 

Target Center

Target Center

Still basking in the afterglow from Caleb Truax and Mohammed Kayongo’s wins Friday night in Saint Paul, we look forward to the next big boxing event in Minnesota.  What to watch for:

  • Joey Abell and Raphael Butler, both Minnesota kids whose careers have gone off track, meet for the Minnesota heavyweight title about a year and a half too late.  The winner will get a big career boost, while the loser will continue to be an obscure, second-tier pro heavyweight.
  • Zach Walters searches for redemption for his recent losses.  Some fans had hoped for a revenge bout with Shawn Hammack, but instead of a revenge bout he gets a match with a man (Sharpe) who beat a man (Rumbolz) who beat the man (Hammack) who beat Walters back in August of 2008.
  • Travis “Freight Train” Walker takes a bout with the “Russian Giant” – a 6-1 big dude who has yet to win a bout against an opponent with a win.  Read that again: not an opponent with a winning record, but an opponent who had ever won a fight at the time of their meeting.
  • Ronnie Peterson gets a rematch with the man, Tomi Archambault, who was briefly given credit for beating him, before the result of that bout was nullified and the bout ruled a no-contest.  As some have said, Peterson has something to prove – but no less does Archambault, who had to be upset and embarrassed by the erasure of that win.
  • Gary Eyer and Levi Cortes meet in a curious match of unbeaten local boys.  Anyone who has seen Eyer fight knows that he is fast, strong, and efficient.  Has anyone seen Cortes fight?  I haven’t.
  • Dave Peterson is matched with a serviceable opponent in Silas Ortley.  Peterson is coming off a tough, close win against previously undefeated Corey Rodriguez, so he’s earned an easier match.  It’s up to “the Prodigy” to make sure that he doesn’t take the night off, because Ortley has proved that he has a good heart and a good chin, despite his lackluster (4-7) record.
  • A matchup of young men looking for their first wins: Saverino Garcia, who is pretty good, takes on Allante Davis, who just isn’t that good.
  • Tony Lee – a very good amateur – turns pro against dangerous Hector Orozco, whose unimpressive record doesn’t give an accurate idea of his potential.

Joey Abell (25-4 with 24 kayos) -vs- Raphael Butler (35-8 with 28 kayos), heavyweights, scheduled for 10 rounds, for the Minnesota state heavyweight title

Zach Walters (24-4 with 19 kayos) -vs- Larry Sharpe (23-7 with 11 kayos), light heavyweights, scheduled for 8 rounds

Travis Walker (33-3 with 28 kayos) -vs- Yevgeniy Shishporenok (6-1 with 5 kayos), heavyweights, scheduled for 6 rounds

Ronnie Peterson (3-0 with 3 kayos) -vs- Tomi Archambault (0-1), super featherweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Gary Eyer (6-0-1 with 5 kayos) -vs- Levi Cortes (3-0 with 2 kayos), welterweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Dave Peterson (11-0 with 6 kayos) -vs- Silas Ortley (4-7 with 3 kayos), light middleweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Saverino Garcia, (0-0-1) -vs- Allante Davis (0-3), light middleweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Tony Lee (debut) -vs- Hector Orozco (1-3 with no kayos), weight unknown, scheduled for 4 rounds

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Minnesota Boxing Scene: In Overdrive

October 26, 2009 · 2 Comments

These are heady days for the Minnesota fight scene.  Join me as I survey the the Minnesota boxing fan’s calendar…

  • November 4 at Camp Lejuene, NC Jason Litzau faces Johnnie “The LumberJack” Edwards (15-4 with 8 kayos) at 130# in a bout to be televised on ESPN2.  Following his seemingly effortless demolition of Verquan Kimbrough (then 21-1-2)  in August, a win here would appear to set Litzau up nicely for something bigger in the near future.
  • Willshaun Boxley takes on another big challenge November 6 when he meets Salvador Sanchez (16-3 with 8 kayos) in a six-rounder in Las Vegas.  Boxley has shown a ton of ambition in the past year, jumping up from the usual early-career patsies to face men with records of 12-7 (Boxley won by unanimous decision), 10-1 (Boxley lost by majority decision), and 10-1 (Boxley lost by unanimous decision).  Sanchez is a pretty good young fighter, but he may have bitten off more than he knows with Boxley.
  • November 13th at Grand Casino Hinckley we find a stacked card – by Minnesota standards anyway – presented by promoter Midwest Sports Council.  Phil Williams and Matt Vanda headline, supported by Wilton Hilario -vs- Leon Bobo, unbeaten prospect Cerresso Fort, Javontae Starks’ pro debut, and more.  Four bouts from this event will be televised on Fox Sports North immediately after the conclusion of the Minnesota Wild hockey game.
  • November 20th in St Paul we’ll see Caleb Truax fight the faded former WBC world title holder Carl “The Squirrel” Daniels (50-18 with 32 kayos) for some IBA Intercontinental hardware.  Daniels has lost seven straight and fourteen out of fifteen, but this fight will force him to train harder than he’s done in a long time – Daniels hasn’t fought below 170# in nearly two years.  A supporting bout gives this event a higher profile: young Welshman James Todd (2-1-1) meets Mohammed Kayongo (14-2 with 10 kayos) for an IBA welterweight title.  Todd’s supporters are talking about making the trip to St Paul to lend their support, and we all know that British boxing fans travel well.  (There has also been a rumor floating that Todd’s countryman Kerry Hope will face Robert Kamya on this card, but I haven’t confirmed that one with promoter Tony Grygelko of Seconds Out Promotions.)
  • The heavyweight bout that Minnesota has waited too long for headlines a December 4th event at Target Center in Minneapolis.  Joey Abell (25-4 with 24 kayos) meets his pal and fellow Minnesotan Raphael Butler (35-8 with 28 kayos) with the vacant Minnesota heavyweight title on the line.  Zach Walters faces Larry Sharpe, who is the man who beat the man (Bruce Rumbolz) who beat the man (Shawn Hammack) who beat Walters back in August of 2008.  Travis “Freight Train” Walker, Ronnie Peterson, Gary Eyer, and Dave Peterson also support this card.
  • No specifics are available at this writing, but Showtime will be in town on December 18 to televise a boxing event at Grand Casino Hinckley.  Expect some locals to get a boost from this show.

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Upcoming Boxing Event: May 21 in Duluth, Minnesota

May 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Horton’s Gym Promotions presents a six or seven-bout card at Grandma’s Sports Garden in Duluth on Thursday, May 21st.

What to watch for: Unbeaten junior welter Gary Eyer rematches Scott Robinson.  In their first match, on March 28, Eyer was the faster and stronger man en route to a TKO win when referee Mark Nelson stopped the fight after two knockdowns in the first round.  Robinson, however, felt that the fight had been stopped prematurely – and he promises a different outcome when the two meet again.  “The Prodigy” Dave Peterson attempts to resurrect a dormant boxing career when he faces tough but unrefined Iowan Joshua Rodriguez in a 6-round light middlweight bout.  Well regarded welterweight RJ Laase tries to run his record to 5-0 against Hector Orozco.  Two talented amateurs make their pro debuts as Jorey Olson and Anthony Wallace mix it up in the cruiserweight division.  Heavyweights Hyacinthus Turnipseed and Enobong Umohette face each other as each vies for his first professional win.  And in an odd twist, Lakendriedk Craig is listed on Boxrec as the opponent for both Tyler Hultin (pro debut) and perpetually hopeful Andson Griggs.  Unless this is a three-way battle, one of the two opponents will have to either face someone else, or bow out of the show.  Promoter Chuck Horton could not be reached for a clarification.

Gary Eyer (5-0-1 with 4 kayos) -vs- Scott Robinson (3-9-1 with 2 kayos), junior welterweights, scheduled for 6 rounds

Dave Peterson (9-0 with 6 kayos) -vs- Joshua Rodriguez (4-7 with 3 kayos), junior middleweights, scheduled for 6 rounds

RJ Laase (4-0 with 2 kayos) -vs- Hector Orozco (0-1), welterweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Jorey Olson (0-0) -vs- Anthony Wallace (0-0), cruiserweights, scheduled for 4 rounds — UPDATE: this fight has been canceled

Hyacinthus Turnipseed (0-4) -vs- Enobong Umohette (0-1), heavyweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

Lakendriek Craig (0-0) -vs- Andson Griggs (1-0-1 with zero kayos), light middleweights, scheduled for 4 rounds — UPDATE: this fight has been canceled

Lakendriek Craig (0-0) -vs- Tyler Hultin (0-0), middleweights, scheduled for 4 rounds

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Live Report: Bonsante-Kolle and Patraw Robertson

March 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

7:17pm – I’m sitting ringside with Willshaun Boxley, and he’s filling me in on how the world works.

7:34pm – The lights go dim and the crowd begins to murmur.

First bout of the evening:

Patrick Cape (now 5-4 with 3 kayos) defeats Daniel Schlienz (now 7-16 with 4 kayos) by KO in round 3 of 4 scheduled.

Schlienz enters the ring first, accompanied by AC/DC.  Cape follows to the strains of Tom Petty’s Won’t Back Down.

Round 1

 The bout begins with both men demonstrating their elusivity.  No punches landed in the first thirty seconds.  Cape bounces a right off of Schlienz with no effect.  Much feinting and ineffectual jabbing.  An overhand right lands for Cape, now a soft left hook to the midsection of Schlienz.  Another right.   Now Schlienz walks into a right, and he begins bleeding from the nose.  However, the expected aggression is generally lacking from both men.  Schlienz back Cape near to a neutral a corner, but Cape punches his way out.  Blood continues to flow from the nose of Schlienz, and another right hook lands for Cape.  Cape is showing a tendency to duck and punch at the same time.  Cape lands a right hook to the temple of Schlienz, and now a powerful right to the jaw.  This round ends with Schlienz failing to land a single meaningful punch.

Round 2

Schlienz comes out with intent, walking Cape down.    Cape is poking out jabs.  Schlienz lands his first hook of the fight, and the crowd says ‘Ooh.’  Schlienz back Cape into a corner, where Cape throws a power shot that buckles Schlienz’s knees, but the two tie up and Schlienz regroups.  More pawing, and Cape catches Schlienz coming in.  Cape lands a big right.  A good right hook lands to Schlienz’s midsection, and he returns the favor to Cape.  Cape lands a right hook to the ear of Schlienz, and now Schlienz is wide-eyed as he continues to stalk.  Cape seems too quick for Schlienz, punishing him as Schlienz tries to come forward.  Cape’s jab is coming on, Schlienz is becoming more tentative.  Now Schlienz lands a right hook to Cape’s jaw.  Cape is smiling as he surveys Schlienz’s bloody face.  An exchange of soft hooks ends this round.

Round 3

This third opens with much ducking and juking but few punches.  Schlienz throws the first punch of the around about fifteen seconds in.  Now Cape backs himself into a corner, then lands a right hook to Schlienz’ head.  A right lands to the body of Schlienz, then a right lands to the body of Cape and a few seconds later a right to the jaw of Cape.  Cape backs way back into a neutral corner and gets hit with a power shot, but he smiles and tries to pretend he didn’t feel it.  Now Cape backs into Schlienz’s corner and lands a good right.  Schlienz face is covered in blood.  Schlienz lands a hook to the body of Cape and hurts him, but Cape still looks like the stronger man.  Now a good right hook lands on Cape’s jaw.  Cape backs into a corner again, but this time comes out with both guns blazing, lands a series of power shots on Schlienz, and Schlienz goes down hard, the back of his head slapping the canvas hard.  Referee Gary Miezwa counts six, then stops the fight as Schlienz is clearly unable to sit up on his own.

Note: there seemed to be a bit of a rush to get Schlienz back on his feet before he was ready, and he wobbled back to his corner before plopping down on his stool.  Schlienz seems okay as he leaves the ring, but hopefully he’ll receive some medical care and a reasonable suspension before he’s allowed in a ring again.

————————-

Second bout of the evening:

Gary Eyer (now 5-0-1 with 4 kayos) defeats Scott Robinson (now 3-9-1 with 2 kayos) by TKO in round 1 of 5 scheduled.

Scott Robinson enters the ring first, serenaded by some hippety hop music.  I’m not a fan (of the music).  Gary Eyer follows him in wearing his customary tie-dye outfit, serenaded by Culture Club’s ‘Do You Really Want to Hurt Me’ – this is Eyer’s signature ring-entrance tune.

Round 1

Robinson rushes out to the center of the ring to engage, but Eyer lands the first punch.  Robinson deserves some credit for his aggressiveness, as he lands three left jabs in quick succession while coming forward.  Eyer bounces a monstrous right off of Robinson, but Robinson comes back with two good left hooks.  Now Eyer rings Robinson’s bell with a huge right hook to the temple, and another power shot lands as Robinson rushes backwards across the ring.  Both men still seem very confident, and neither respects the other’s power, but Eyer puts Robinson to the mat with several hooks and overhand punches.  Robinson rises and after a mandatory eight count he lands a glancing left hook to the temple of Eyer – Robinson seems genuinely unhurt, despite what we just saw.  Now Robinson lands a one-two, followed by a left hook to the body.  Eyer’s right finds Robinson’s ribs, and Robinson seems hurt but does not go down.  Eyer misses with a right and takes a Robinson punch to the face for his trouble.  Eyer follows up with a series of strong shots that put Robinson down on his his knees, his head and upper body protruding through the ropes.  Referee Mark Nelson is decisive in stopping the fight immediately, but Robinson, who seems very lucid, is incensed.  Fight over.

Third bout of the evening:

Cerresso Fort (now 5-0 with 5 kayos) defeats Joshua Rodriguez (now 4-7 with 3 kayos) in round 4 of 6 scheduled.

Rodriguez enters the ring to some non-descript pop music.  Fort is accompanied by a live rap performance by a black guy in Harry Caray glasses.

Round 1

The round begins with Fort, visibly larger than Rodriguez, landing multiple right hands, but taking a forehead to the temple when he gets too free and easy coming in.  Fort is confident to a fault, lunging and jumping forward as he throws.  Things slow down a bit, and now both men are conservative in their movements.  Fort lands a nice power shot, but Rodriguez is unmoved.  Mark Nelson sends Rodriguez to a neutral corner and asks Fort’s corner to cut some loose tape from a mitt.  Now Fort comes back out with a vengenace, landing repeated power shots to the head of Rodriguez, who looks aggravated but unhurt.  Fort’s left jab is now landing with regularity.  The two now begin circling, and Rodriguez catches Fort with a flurry as Fort attempts to come forward.  Fort responds with tremendous aggression, landing a series of power shots that snap Rodriguez’s head back repeatedly.  A lengthy lull at the close of the round ends with Fort landing a vicious right hook at the bell.

Round 2

Fort’s greater reach is clear, and he uses it – but not to full advantage, as Rodriguez occasionally catches him with a lead or a counter.  The two men trade in the center of the ring, Fort landing the last and hardest shot.  Fort bounces on his toes and switches up his feet a couple of times, then hits Rodriguez with a strong hook.  The two trade again, and again Fort comes out on top.  Rodriguez’s posture is changing; he’s beginning to hunker down even as he comes forward.  Fort lands a strong left hook, punching through his target, then does it again a few seconds later.  the two are moving more slowly now, and referee Nelson isn’t running so much to keep good angles.  In the last few seconds before the bell Fort lands two one-twos, and the round comes to an end.

Round 3

The pattern that’s emerging is that Rodriguez can land a lead here and there, but Fort makes him pay every time.  Fort pumps the jab a few times and it serves to emphasize how infrequently he’s been throwing it.  Now Rodriguez lands a strong left hook, but it’s a single punch.  Fort throws a  hard straight right that puts Rodriguez up against the ropes and draws blood from his nose.  Rodriguez continues to buy his offense at a heavy price, as Fort smears his blood around with lefts and rights.  Fort covers up and allows Rodriguez to bounce a couple of power shots off his forearms, and and emerges after twenty seconds of relative inactivity to land about five good power shots that clearly hurt Rodriguez.  A huge left jab to the face draws an audible grunt from Rodriguez.  With five seconds to go Rodriguez opens up and for the first time in a while lands a few punches without eating any counters from Fort.

Round 4

The combatants land simultaneous short rights, then commence to circling.  Fort connects with another good left hook, Rodriguez a good shot of his own, and Fort a good right that would knock out a horse.  Rodriguez backs into the ropes and takes a tremendous beating, Fort landing a series of six to eight power shots flush and undefended.  Mark Nelson stops the fight just before Rodriguez takes a knee, and Rodriguez, knowing that the stoppage is good, spits his mouthpiece out with pronounced disappointment.

INTERMISSION

Fifth bout of the evening:

Brad Patraw (now 5-0 with 3 kayos) defeats Antwan Robertson (now 4-1 with 3 kayos) by unanimous decision after 6 rounds

The orchestral theme to Superman heralds Antwan Robertson’s ring entrance, and Robertson enters the ring in full Superman regalia, including a red cape.  Wow - Antwan’s made a trip to the costume shop!  Now Brad Patraw bounces out of the locker room with a full mohawk.  In black stencil on the back of Patraw’s trunks is the word Kryptonite.  Looking good, guys.  The mood in this room is electric.

Round 1

The two men rush out to the center of the ring and touch gloves, and Patraw immediately goes on the offensive, roughing Roberton up and forcing a clinch.  Now the two begin to circle and feint.  Robertson charges forward but in doing so forgets to throw a punch, then backs off and lands a jab.  we have a clinch, some wrestling, and an angry warning from referee Gary Miezwa.  Robertson seems not fully prepared to deal with Patraw’s aggressiveness.  Now Patraw drops his right hand and swings it like a pendulum, daring Robertson to clock him.  It may be a little early for that, Brad.  The two are jabbing, ducking, and showboating.  Patraw lands a hateful right hook to the body of Robertson and Robertson follows ten seconds later with a straight right that throws Patraw off balance.  Patraw corners Robertson and lands a single right to the body.  As the round draws to a close Patraw chases Robertson down and lands a few more single punches, including one to the chin.

Round 2

Patraw hurries out and immediately lands a single right jab, and Robertson is on the retreat again.  Robertson is trying to out-quick and out-clinch Patraw, and lands a major right hook to the head.  Patraw responds with vigor.  Robertson does it again, landing another single right hook.  Patraw throws two punches to the back of Robertson’s head and is warned.  Now Robertson is smiling, and it looks more like glee than show.  Patraw lands another punch to the back of Roberton’s head, unseen by the referee.  Patraw corners Robertson and lands a good right hook, but that’s it for offense.  Robertson lands a straight right, again a single punch.  Robertson is boxing, Patraw is rushing in with aggression.  Miezwa puts a pause to the action so Patraw’s shoelace can be retied, and everyone in the crowd is shouting insructions to both fighters.  Patraw chases Robertson down throwing jabs that don’t land, then puts a right hook into Robertson’s ribs just before the round ends.

Round 3

The pace is beginning to slow in this one.  Patraw lands a wide left and a wide right, then lands a stinging right to Roberton’s ribs.  Robertson fights back in anger, landing two fierce hooks, then taunts Patraw.  Patraw is incensed, but tones things down and throws several jabs to the body.  A winging left hook lands for Patraw, then a jab to the face.  Robertson is doing a good job of protecting his body, and the two clinch again, ending in a wrestling match and an intervention by Miezwa.  Robertson has his right hand at his waist, Patraw drops his left.  Single punches are landing, and Robertson puts his head down and bulls forward.  Patraw puts Robertson in a headlock, angering the crowd.  Now Patraw batters Robertson into a corner, allows him to escape, chases him down again, and lands a couple of vicious hooks in the opposite corner of the ring.  Bell, and the round is over.

Round 4

Robertson lands a right and then throws his first three-punch combination of the fight.  Patraw is content to follow for a time, then corners Robertson and hurts him there.  Robertson escapes and runs, but is caught and hurt again.  Robertson appears distressed.  Patraw’s speed and technique are overcoming Robertson’s athleticism and taunting.  This round is going decisively in Patraw’s favor, and he begins to taunt Robertson by hanging his face out to be hit.  Robertson is unable to pull the trigger.  Exiting a clinch without the referee’s direction Robertson lands a good right to Patraw’s head, and the two circle and stare for the remainder of the round.

Round 5

Patraw lands a left hook.  Robertson is warned to keep his punches up, I did not see the cause for this warning.  Patraw is stalking, Robertson is retreating.  Patraw’s face is now expressionless as he is focused on his goal.  Miezwa pauses the fight again so that Patraw’s shoelace can be retied…again.  Do they offer a course in shoe-tying in the St Paul public schools?  Patraw lands a  strong hook to Robertson’s head.  Robertson is very athletic but seems to lack direction in the ring.  Robertson lands a huge right hook which causes Patraw to grin.  You know what a grinning fighter means – it means that hurt.  Patraw continues to press the action, and Robertson flinches at a feint for the first time as the round draws near its end.  Patraw lands two combinations that make Robertson grin, and the bell sounds.

Round 6

The early action in round six is nonstop and exciting.  Robertson obviously knows that he needs an knockout to win, and he is going for broke.  About midway throught the round there’s a lull in the action, and then Patraw fires back with three hooks that land.  Robertson has decided to retreat, but the ropes stop him and he’s caught again.  Robertson tries to spin out of a clinch and Patraw manages to halt his right hook before it lands to the back of Antwan’s head.  Patraw has Robertson hurt now, and with blood in the water he’s going for the kill.  Robertson is getting backed up and hurt, and he has no answer for Patraw.  Now a wicked Patraw left hook lands at the ten seconds warning, and Patraw charges forward, does a high-stepping dance, and lands a couple more power shots at the final bell.

Fifth and final bout of the evening:

Main Event: Andy Kolle (now 18-2 with 13 kayos) defeated Anthony Bonsante (now 32-11-3 with 18 kayos) by TKO in round 3 of 10 scheduled, to take away Bonsante’s Minnesota middleweight championship.

After two well-performed anthems (tribal and national), the entrances are delayed by an apparent altercation in the crowd.  What was that I said about a charged atmosphere?  Kolle’s signature ring-entrance music begins and the crowd erupts.  Kolle enters the ring in a shiny black plastic ensemble, shirt and shorts.  He brings an entourage with him, and they play to the crowd for a good two minutes as the music blares.  Now Bonsante’s contingent screams for their man as he approaches the ring to Sammy Kershaw’s I Got It Honest.  Something you don’t see every day: each man has his own  announcer – Greg Lowe for Kolle, Dan Cole for Bonsante.

Round 1

And they’re off.  Kolle starts pumping the right jab early, Bonsante takes a moment to get going.  First punch to land is a left jab from Kolle to Bonsante’s midsection.  The crowd begins to chant for Kolle, and Kolle lands a stiff left jab to Bonsante’s gut.  Bonsante charges in for the first time tonight but is unable to get inside.  Another try results in Kolle’s right elbow contacting Bonsnate’s nose, but no evident damage is done.  Kolle continues to jab and Bonsante is moving backward.  Now Bonsante lands a right hook and chases Kolle into a corner but departs without getting inside.  The two trade jabs from the outside, but neither is landing effectively.  Now Bonsante lands his first earnest punches of the night, a couple of angry right hooks, and the two clash and trade.  Bonsante is unable to stay inside for long, and the round ends with Kolle splashing another jab into Bonsante’s face.

Round 2

Bonsante lands a left jab to Kolle’s face, then gets inside and lands wide hooks to both sides of Kolle’s ribcage.  A clinch devolves into a Bonsante headlock, but the two part ways.  The two trade briefly, and Bonsante gets the better of it.  Bonsante is having some success with hooks to the body, but he leaves himself open and Kolle lands a strong left to his face.  Bonsante gets inside again and surprises Kolle with a left hook to the face.  Now Kolle is closing the distance, and that’s to Bonsante’s advantage.  Another left lands to Kolle’s head, and he responds with a three punch combination that misses completely.  Another three-punch combo also misses for Kolle.  Kolle is having trouble landing the jab, Bonsnate gets inside then stands up, briefly lifting Kolle off his feet.  Bonsante is tagged with a combination of three hard hooks to the face as the round ends, and he walks back to his corner looking annoyed.

Round 3

Early on it’s all Bonsante, but then the two begin to trade and Kolle lands several good hooks that hurt Bonsante.  The two circle and trade, then Kolle lands a hook that stuns Bonsante and a straight left that puts him out cold.  Referee Mark Nelson begins to count as Bonsante lies prone on his stomache with his butt in the air, and Bonsante suddenly comes to and rises to his feet.  After the mandatory eight-count Bonsante is unable to continue, and the fight is waved off!  Nelson stops the bout at 1:37 of the third round, and Minnesota has a new middleweight champion! 

Conclusion:  Bonsante grabs the microphone and graciously announces that Kolle is a good kid and hit him with a good left.  Bonsante says that he had a good run as state middleweight champ and that if he had to lose his title to anyone, he’s glad it was Kolle.  For his part, Kolle dedicates his win to the people of Fargo-Moorhead and asks that folks volunteer in the ongoing flood fight.

The crowd here tonight was great, and no matter who you supported, you should be glad for the great turnout, exciting atmostphere, and compelling bouts.

Note: Referee Mark Nelson explains his decision to stop the fight: “I almost told Bonsante to walk toward me, but then instead I decided to ask him a question.  I asked him if he was ready to continue and he said ‘No.’  I asked him again, are you ready to continue?  And he said ‘No” again.  Bonsante is an old pro and I’ve worked his fights before, and he knows what I expect of him.  I could have waved it off but I wanted to give him every opportunity to continue, and he wasn’t ready to go.  So I stopped it.

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Upcoming Boxing Event: March 28 at Grand Casino Hinckley

March 22, 2009 · 1 Comment

The atmosphere on Saturday night is guaranteed to be charged.  There will be loyalists from various boxing camps, hardcore boxing fans hoping for a great show, and casual fans hoping for a scary knockout.  There will be all the vulgar rituals that inevitably attend our beautiful sport: drinking, betting, shouting, swearing, and arguing.  Cameras will be flashing, reporters taking notes, bloggers trying ineffectually to conserve laptop battery power, and perhaps even a few representatives of the mainstream press trying to understand the strange and unfamiliar spectacle that confronts them.

But most critically, there should be you.

I hope you’ve bought your tickets.  I’m not predicting a sellout, but I have been told that sales are “ahead of all other past Hinckley shows.”  And why not?  The featured bout is a matchup of the most accomplished middleweight in Minnesota in the last ten years with one of the highest-profile young fighters to emerge from our state in any division in the last five years.  The co-feature will  showcase two talented small men putting their undefeated status on the line.  And the undercard consists of four well-matched bouts.

What to watch for:  Defending Minnesota middleweight champ Anthony Bonsante defends his belt against worthy challenger Andy Kolle.  The winner will raise his profile and the loser will question the direction of his career.  Super flyweight Antwan Robertson and featherweight Brad Patraw compromise and meet at 120# as they fight for the first time as pros – remember that Patraw gave Robertson two of the three losses of his amateur career.  Ceresso Fort of Rice Street takes on rough and reckless Iowan Joshua Rodriguez.  Gary Eyer makes the trip from Duluth to face old veteran Scott Robinson of Wisconsin.  Brawler Tyler Gould returns to welterweight to fight division fixture Danny Schlienz.  And newcomer Kasey Kluge makes his professional debut against winless Brandon Skinner of Nebraska.

  • Anthony Bonsante (32-10 with 18 kayos) -vs- Andy Kolle (17-2 with 12 kayos), for the Minnesota state middleweight title, scheduled for 10 rounds
  • Brad Patraw (4-0 with 3 kayos) -vs- Antwan Robertson (4-0 with 3 kayos), super bantamweights, scheduled for 6 rounds
  • Ceresso Fort (4-0 with 4 kayos) -vs- Joshua Rodriguez (4-6 with 3 kayos), light heavyweights, scheduled for 6 rounds
  • Gary Eyer (4-0-1 with 3 kayos) -vs- Scott Robinson (3-8-1 with 2 kayos), lightweights, scheduled for 5 rounds
  • Kasey Kluge (0-0) -vs- Brandon Skinner (0-2), featherweights, scheduled for 4 rounds
  • Tyler Gould (5-3 with 5 kayos) -vs- Daniel Schlienz (7-15-1 with 4 kayos), scheduled for 4 rounds

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Profile: “Jungle Boy” Zach Walters (Part 2)

October 17, 2008 · 2 Comments

Attempting to rebound after a shocking loss to Shawn Hammack on August 31, Zach Walters was scheduled to fight Cory “The Cobra” Phelps on October 25.  That event, however, has been postponed until November or December.  Walters announced the postponement in an October 15 press release that included this somewhat cryptic statement: “The plan is to make a huge fight card to burst the local boxing scene to a new level.  We hope to keep our fight with Cory Phelps for that date and so far that looks like it will work out.”  The Fistic Mystic is as curious as you are to find out what it all means.  In any case, Phelps’ 13-4 record doesn’t include any significant victories, but as Walters points out, “Phelps is not coming to lose and we can’t count out our fellow boxers that come in to give us a rough night.”  Walters didn’t like it that I called Phelps a tomato can in an earlier article.  “I think it is disrespectful… I am prepared to make sure the fight is a solid win for me, of course, but your comment takes away from the win and leaves the fans to take it for granted.”  He’s absolutely right, and I suppose that I’m guilty as charged.  I’ll have to pull out the old thesaurus and see whether I can find a less insulting euphemism for an opponent with a limited chance to win.

I asked Walters to analyze his boxing style and he described himself as a boxer/puncher, but said “I can drop a big bomb when I need to.”  His strategy is to cater his style to his individual opponent.  His training generally consists of running in the morning and boxing in the afternoon, but he is reticent to reveal too much about his training.  Since turning pro at the age of 21 Walters has fought as a light heavyweight almost exclusively, and plans to stay there – “I feel very comfortable at 175 lbs.”

As he attempts to regain ground that was lost with the defeat to Shawn Hammack, Jungle Boy’s training is taking place in a new setting.  Last spring a fire damaged the building that housed Horton’s Gym and rendered most of the gym’s equipment unusable.  By the end of the summer a new home had been found in downtown Duluth, but in the meantime Horton’s stable of fighters was forced to improvise.  “We trained in a pole barn out of town [until the new location was ready]…the transition was rough, but fighters and trainers hung together. Now we have a new beginning in a nice facility.”

Walters had this to say about his friend and gym mate Andy “Kaos” Kolle.  “Kolle’s last fight was a big opportunity for him. Kaos is the kind of guy that never backs down from a challenge. He stepped in with a guy that is regarded as the pound-for-pound most dangerous fighter. Paul Williams must be everything he is talked up to be because I have known Kolle since we started boxing and I have never seen him hurt like that. I know that if Kolle can see a shot coming he’ll brace himself for it and it won’t hurt him. The hook he got hit with came wide behind his vision. That’s what I think got him. I watched him prepare for the fight. His level of intensity was off the charts. I figured Williams was in for a tough night with KAOS. When it ended as it did I was shocked. Kolle makes no excuses and he is in good spirits. He lost a fight to a two time world champ. His career is very accomplished for having less than 20 fights. He will come back strong as ever before.”

Walters offered a further endorsement of two other Horton’s Gym cohorts: “RJ and Gary are good. They have their own styles and are polar opposites aside from their potential to make some waves in the boxing scene.”  RJ Laase (4-0 with 2 kayos) is known as a smooth and technical boxer, while Gary Eyer (4-0-1 with 3 kayos) is a flamboyant fighter with good power.

One of the very compelling aspects of the Jungle Boy story is his desire to bring a title fight to Africa.  It should come as no great surprise that a young professional athlete wants to ply his trade in front of the hometown folks, and it’s natural that Walters has a persistent vision to bring a title fight to Madagascar.  “Back in 1999 I was in Madagascar with my brother Jake on a mission trip. Before leaving the island for the US we had a chance to visit with many of our friends. My Malagasy was rusty from not using it much in the states, but I had enough vocabulary in order to tell them that I had gotten into boxing and would someday return to Madagascar. At the time I was an amateur boxer. When I turned pro the sport opened up new doors for me. When I won the WBC-African Boxing Union title I thought it would be a great opportunity to line up a title defense in Madagascar. That way I’d fulfill my promise to return and would also get a chance to showcase my boxing.”  That vision may not be on the back burner, exactly, but it isn’t front-and-center at the moment.  Losing is bad in any game, but in prizefighting it’s a calamity.  Usually a fighter who wants to win a major title isn’t allowed to lose at all on his way to the top.

In one of my more presumptuous moments I asked Walters to tell me something he had learned from each of his three professional losses.  His reply to that query was one of the more emphatic responses I got from him.  “The first loss [to 10-2 cruiserweight Robert Linton in 2004] I got ripped off by the judges. I learned not to rely on the judges to get a win. I learned that to win a fight I have to take it away from my opponent. I became more aggressive after that loss and worked on my punching power.  The second loss [to 38-3 Hugo Pineda in 2006] I learned about prefight distractions. I learned that I can’t beat everyone on determination alone. After that fight I focused on my boxing skill to become a better ring general. My trainers worked on giving me more dimensions. I became a better boxer after that fight. This last loss [to 15-6 Shawn Hammack] I learned about dehydration. I was boxing superbly and had the fight in the bag. I don’t feel like was beaten by my opposition. The loss was the result of a fluke punch that found its mark at the right time.  I found out afterward that an element of dehydration is a surge of endorphins. I could feel a cramp developing in the back of my left leg, but didn’t think much of it because I had plenty of energy. Anyway, when I got hit I knew something was way off. I couldn’t shake the punch. Dehydration got me.”

The Fistic Mystic says: The time can’t be too far off when the Jungle Boy will be given an opportunity to step up to the next level.  Here’s hoping that this loquacious young man with the fascinating story will make a major splash in the rapidly evolving light heavyweight division.

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Upcoming Boxing Event: October 25 in Superior, WI

October 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

It’s customary for a boxer who has recently lost for the first time – or for the first time in a long time – to be served a tomato can upon his return to the ring.  Thus is it being done with Zach “Jungle Boy” Walters, who was shockingly and suddenly knocked out by Shawn Hammack on August 31 after building an unbeaten streak that had reached eight fights and eighteen months.  The circumstances of that unexpected loss are well known: Walters and Hammack had gone at it for seven and a half rounds of an eight round fight, Walters was comfortably ahead on the scorecards, and Hammack landed a one-in-a-thousand punch.  The Jungle Boy made a valiant attempt to regain his orientation and finish the fight, but was unable and the fight was stopped at 2:28 of the final round with Walters out on his feet and getting pummeled.

Walters, now 23-3 with 18 kayos, seems to suffer from no lack of confidence, saying “I’d fight Hammack in a heartbeat. He got lucky in that last round, but luck counts in boxing.”  But the situation demands a tomato can, and so one has been retained for the occasion: Cory Phelps of Kentucky.  What does Walters know about Phelps?  “He is coming down to light-heavy to box me after four fights at cruiserweight.  He looks like he is about my height and has fast hands.”  Though Phelps’ 13-4-1 record looks sporty at first glance, it is illusory.  Phelps has three victories against Tyron Mack (now 4-46), one against Kevin Rainey (now 2-28), and one against Eric Starr (now 15-37-3), and he has never beaten an opponent with a winning record (though he did manage a six-round draw against Bobby Gunn, who was 18-3 going in).  What Phelps brings to the table is clear: he is a credible-looking opponent, he has been in the ring with several good prospects, and he has been around the block a few times, having fought in nine states plus once in Germany.  Says the always candid Walters, “I believe I’ll still reach my ultimate goal.  Right now I have no choice but to keep going and fight the guy in front of me.”

Walters and Phelps headline an October 25 card to be held at Mortorelli Gym in Superior, WI.  The remainder of the card looks like this:

  • Zach Walters (23-3 with 18 kayos) -vs- Cory Phelps (13-4-1 with 7 kayos), light heavyweights, 10 rounds
  • Gary Eyer (4-0-1 with 3 kayos) -vs- Scott Robinson (3-8 with 2 kayos), lightweights, 6 rounds
  • Andson Griggs (1-0) -vs- Silas Ortley (3-5 with 2 kayos), middleweights, 4 rounds
  • RJ Laase (4-0 with 2 kayos) -vs- Clinton Bendickson (1-0 with 1 kayo), light welterweights, 4 rounds
  • Skulli Armannsson (1-0 with 1 kayo) -vs- TBD, heavyweights, 4 rounds

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Boxing Results: August 31 at Fortune Bay Casino

August 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

What to watch for: Jungle Boy Zach Walters takes on a rugged veteran on a three-bout win streak in Shawn Hammack, skilled boxer RJ Laase tangles with northwestern brawler Tyler Gould, flambouyant knockout artist Gary Eyer takes a step up in opponent quality, cheesehead Nick Popowich from Green Bay is matched with North Dakota’s Terrence Trottier Jr, fiery Michael Davis of Grand Forks takes on new pro David Duncan, and Montreze Evans of Indiana makes his professional debut against Brian Cohen from Pennsylvania.

  • Zach “Jungle Boy” Walters (now 23-3 with 18 kayos) lost to Shawn Hammack (17-6 with 13 kayos) by knockout in round 8 of 8
  • Tyler Gould (5-2 with 5 kayos) lost to RJ Laase (4-0 with 2 kayos) by knockout in round 3 of 6
  • Gary Eyer (4-0-1 with 3 kayos) majority draw with Guadalupe Diaz (4-4-1 with 1 kayo) in 6 rounds
  • Terrence Trottier Jr (1-3) defeated Nick Popowich (0-1) by TKO in round 3 of 4
  • Michael Davis (2-5 with 2 kayos) defeated David Duncan (0-1) by knockout in round 1 of 4
  • Brian Cohen (4-1 with 2 kayos) defeated Montreze Evans (0-1) by knockout in round 3 of 4

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Boxing Results: June 7 at Wessman Arena in Superior, WI

June 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Kolle and Walters with NABA belts

Results for the Saturday June 7 fight card in Superior follow.

Snippets from Superior:  Zach Walters blew out Aaron Norwood as expected, getting the knockout in round 2.  This win gives Walters a second minor title (NABA regional to go with his WBC-ABU) and is expected to catapult Walters into the top ten in the WBC world light heavyweight rankings.  Andy Kolle beat Jonathan Reid of “Contender” fame, going the distance with the tough and experienced old pro and adding another prestige win to his resume.  With the win Kolle also gains his first official belt, the NABA middleweight title.  After their fight Reid graciously called Kolle a champion and vowed to continue his boxing career.  Flamboyant Gary Eyer remains unbeaten and Terrance Trottier Jr is still searching for his first win after Eyer kayoed Trottier in the first round of their junior welterweight tilt.  Everyone wants to know, and here’s the answer: Eyer wore tie-dyed feather-boa shorts and lime green shoes.  Tim Taggart comes up short in his match with tough guy Jon Schmidt of the ACR Gym in Anoka, Schmidt getting the TKO win with a fourth-round stoppage in a fight that the Duluth News Tribune described as a “bloody” affair.  RJ Laase pads his record with a majority decision win against Mike Davis, a North Dakotan who has yet to take his first pro victory.  Icelandic heavyweight Skuli Armannsson, a highly decorated amateur, takes out local boy Caleb Nelson with a second-round knockout in a fight that represents the professional boxing debuts of both fighters.

  • Zach Walters (now 23-2 with 18 kayos) defeated Aaron Norwood (now 25-10 with 13 kayos) by knockout in round 2
  • Andy Kolle (17-1 with 12 kayos) defeated Jonathan Reid (34-10 with 19 kayos) by UD in 10 rounds
  • Gary Eyer (4-0 with 3 kayos) defeats Terrance Trottier Jr (0-3) by knockout in round 1
  • Jon Schmidt (5-1 with 4 kayos) defeated Tim Taggart (2-1 with 1 kayo) by TKO in round 4
  • RJ Laase (3-0 with 1 kayo) defeated Michael Davis (0-5) by MD in 4 rounds
  • Skulli Armannsson (1-0 with 1 kayo) defeated Caleb Nelson (0-1) by knockout in round 2

Andy

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Updated Info on June 7 Fights in Superior

May 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The card for the June 7 event in Superior Wisconsin has evolved a little bit.  Here’s a combination of the information published on Boxrec.com and information gleaned from the fight poster from Horton’s Gym in Duluth:

  • Zach Walters (22-2 with 17 kayos) -vs- Aaron Norwood (25-9 with 13 kayos), light heavyweights, scheduled for 10 rounds, for the WBA-America light heavyweight title
  • Andy Kolle (16-1 with 12 kayos) -vs- Jonathan Reid (34-9 with 19 kayos, middleweights, scheduled for 10 rounds, for the NABA title
  • Gary Eyer (3-0 with 2 kayos) -vs- TBA, scheduled for 4 rounds
  • Tim Taggart (2-0 with 1 kayo) -vs- TBA, scheduled for 4 rounds
  • RJ Laase (2-0 with 1 kayo) -vs- TBA, scheduled for 4 rounds
  • Jake Betz (2-2 with 2 kayos) -vs- Skuli Armannsson (no professional record found), heavyweights,  rounds

Official poster, courtesy of Horton's Gym 

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